- Bystritskii, Vit.;
- Garate, E.;
- Rostoker, N.;
- Song, Y.;
- VanDrie, A.;
- Anderson, M.;
- Qerushi, A.;
- Dettrick, S.;
- Binderbauer, M.;
- Walters, J. K;
- Matvienko, V.;
- Petrov, A.;
- Shlapakovsky, A.;
- Polkovnikova, N.;
- Isakov, I.
The paper describes experiments on the generation and transport of a low energy (70-120 keV), high intensity (10-30 A/cm(2)) microsecond duration H+ ion beam (IB) in vacuum and plasma. The IB was generated in a magnetically insulated diode (MID) with an applied radial B field and an active hydrogen-puff ion source. The annular IB, with an initial density of j(i)similar to10-20 A/cm(2) at the anode surface, was ballistically focused to a current density in the focal plane of 50-80 A/cm(2). The postcathode collimation and transport of the converging IB were provided by the combination of a "concave" toroidal magnetic lens followed by a straight transport solenoid section. With optimized MID parameters and magnetic fields in the lens/solenoid system, the overall efficiency of IB transport at the exit of the solenoid 1 m from the anode was similar to 50% with an IB current density of 20 A/cm(2). Two-dimensional computer simulations of post-MID IB transport supported the optimization of system parameters. (C) 2004 American Institute of Physics.